Climate change in Asia and the Colorado Plateau is boosting temperatures, reducing river flows and turning winter snows into rains. Here's what people are doing about it:
The most difficult problem we face may be one species of non-native grass that has vexed ranchers, public land lovers and land managers alike for decades.
In 1892, Buffalo Bill and an entourage of English noblemen spent a memorable night at Kane Ranch headquarters, hosted by ranch owner Edwin Dilworth “Dee” Woolley.
After six years in college and graduate school in the Southeast, I was excited to swap Appalachia’s dense forests for the Southwest’s wide-open desert vistas.
The grass moved and swayed in the wind, I could almost feel the breeze. A bird would fly to the tree and perch on the creaking branch but in the next slide, it would disappear.